Methods of forming a conductive metal layers on substrates are disclosed which employ a seed layer to enhance bonding, especially to smooth, low-roughness or hydrophobic substrates. In one aspect of the invention, the seed layer can be formed by applying nanoparticles onto a surface of the substrate; and the metallization is achieved by electroplating an electrically conducting metal onto the seed layer, whereby the nanoparticles serve as nucleation sites for metal deposition. In another approach, the seed layer can be formed by a self-assembling linker material, such as a sulfur-containing silane material.
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1. A method of forming a conductive metal contact on a substrate, comprising:
selectively applying a seed layer on a portion of the surface, wherein this step comprises:
applying a layer of polymeric particles in an array pattern on the substrate to cover a portion of the surface;
depositing a mask layer onto the polymeric particles and substrate surface;
removing the layer of polymeric particles thereby exposing the portion of the surface of the substrate according to the array pattern;
applying a seed layer of nanoparticles onto the remaining portions of the mask layer and the exposed regions of the substrate surface; and
removing the mask layer by dissolving the mask layer with an acidic solution, thereby removing a portion of the seed layer adherent to the mask layer but preserving another portion of the seed layer applied to the substrate according to the array pattern; and
preferentially depositing an electrically conducting metal onto the selectively applied seed layer by electroplating whereby the nanoparticles serve as nucleation sites for metal deposition.
2. The method of
applying the nanoparticles as a complex with an immobilizing carrier; and
annealing the complex to apply the nanoparticles onto the surface of the substrate.
3. The method of
4. The method of
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7. The method of
8. The method of
9. The method of
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14. The method of
15. The method of
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This invention was made with U.S. government support under Grant No. DE-FG02-08ER46516, awarded by the U.S. Department of Energy. The Government has certain rights in this invention.
Metallization is the process of depositing metal material on the surface of a substrate. Electroplating and other forms of electro-deposition are commonly used metallization techniques to form electrical conductive contacts or protective coatings. For example, electroplating is used in ultra large-scale integration (ULSI) to provide multiple levels of copper or copper alloy metallization.
Metallization is also used in the fabrication of optoelectronic devices such as transparent thin film transistors (TFT), flat panel displays, light-emitting diodes (LED), photovoltaic cells, and electrochromic windows to provide interconnects for transparent device-to-device integration. In the case of electrochromic window fabrication, substrates are typically semiconductors or transparent conductive oxides (TCO), e.g. zinc oxide, indium-tin oxide, and fluorine-doped tin oxide. Furthermore, electroplating is used in the fabrication of power electronics for the metallization of ceramic substrates.
The fabrication of thermoelectric devices or device components also requires metallization on semiconductor substrates. Thermoelectric devices are uniquely advantageous in heat removal and energy harvesting applications because they are free of moving parts, acoustically silent, and they can be integrated into microelectronic devices. Recent advances have greatly improved the thermoelectric figure-of-merit (ZT) of nanostructured thermoelectric alloys. In particular, nanostructured p-type bismuth antimony telluride has achieved a peak figure-of-merit (ZT) of about 1.4 at 100° C.
However, these material property advances have not fully translated into better overall performance in the thermoelectric devices due at least in part to variations in the thermal and electrical contact resistances between the nanostructured alloy substrates and the metallized electrodes. A poorly formed contact generates localized Joule heating effects and leads to a non-uniform current distribution which lowers an effective figure-of-merit (ZTeff) for the thermoelectric device from that of the thermoelectric material.
Generally, in the fabrication of electronic devices, thermoelectric devices, and other metallization processes, desirable electrical and thermal contact properties are highly correlated with a uniform deposition of the metallic atoms on the substrate which creates a strong adhesion and an effective interface between the deposited metal layers and the substrate. In particular, the process of electroplating metal depends on a nucleation process, which is determined by the formation energy, excess energy, and internal strain energy of the phase transition during metallization.
Direct electroplating on smooth, low-roughness, or hydrophobic surfaces of glass, semiconductor, or ceramic substrates is difficult because the target surface has low surface energy or poor wettability, which leads to a relatively high excess energy for electroplating nucleation. As a consequence, scattered and irregular grains of metal grow on a small number of nucleation sites, causing poor interfacial adhesion and large surface roughness. A further consequence of the scattered and irregular grain formation is that strain energy, which is caused by a different atomic arrangement between two adjacent metallization layers, increases with increasing overall metallization thickness, and can sometimes cause metallization layers to spontaneously peel off.
Furthermore, for many applications, metallization is desired on only a portion of the substrate surface, e.g., to form an electrical contact at a specific location. Here, additional processes are typically employed prior to the electroplating process to achieve a selective metallization. For example, a patterning process can be used to form a masking pattern layer on a selected region or regions on the surface of the substrate.
In one commonly used approach to selective metallization, photolithography is employed to create a patterned photoresist layer on the substrate. The exposed regions (the portions not covered by the photoresist mask) can then be etched to create additional surface roughness (or simply to expose the area for metal deposition). Metal can then be sputtered onto the exposed (and etched) regions. These processes improve both the adhesion and electrical conductivity of the primary structure constructed by the subsequent electroplating process. Following the electroplating process, an additional chemical mechanical polishing process can be used to remove any surplus metal and planarize the entire surface. Finally, the photoresist is removed.
Although photolithography and other similar techniques can achieve selective metallization with a high degree of precision, these techniques require costly specialized equipments and can significantly hinder device production rates.
There exists a need for better metallization techniques, especially techniques that can be used on smooth, low-roughness or hydrophobic substrates to achieve high quality metal layers with strong adhesion. Metallization techniques that can achieve selective metallization without the complexity of photolithography would also satisfy a long felt need in the art.
Methods of forming a conductive metal layers on substrates are disclosed which employ a seed layer to enhance bonding, especially to smooth, low-roughness or hydrophobic substrates. In one aspect of the invention, the seed layer can be formed by applying nanoparticles onto a surface of the substrate; and the metallization can be achieved by electroplating an electrically conducting metal onto the seed layer, whereby the nanoparticles serve as nucleation sites for metal deposition. In another approach, the seed layer can be formed by a self-assembling linker material, such as a sulfur-containing silane material.
The methods of the present invention can be particularly effective to provide metallization to substrate surfaces that are characterized by at least one of the following characteristics: low surface energy, poor wettability, a hydrophobic surface, a glass (or glass-like) composition or low surface roughness.
When nanoparticles are used as the linker material, the nanoparticles can be applied as a complex with an immobilizing carrier. Following application the complex can be annealed or heated to essentially sinter the nanoparticles onto the surface of the substrate. In one embodiment, the complex can be a complex of polymer encased nanoparticles in which the polymer can be at least one polymer selected from poly(vinylpyrrolidone) (PVP), poly(acrylamide) (PAM), poly(vinyl alcohol) (PVAL), poly(acrylic acid) (PAA), and poly(ethyleneimine) (PEI).
In certain preferred embodiments, the nanoparticles can be metal nanoparticles, e.g., having a composition that includes at least one metal selected from the group of platinum, gold, palladium, ruthenium, silver, titanium, tantalum, tungsten, aluminum, chromium, cobalt, nickel, and their respective alloys. In some applications the method can further include a pre-treatment step of contacting the substrate with a surfactant, e.g., a cationic surfactant, prior to depositing the seed layer.
The methods of the present invention, especially when metallic nanoparticles are used, can also be effective in selective metallization of portion of a substrate by selectively applying a seed layer to a portion of the surface and then preferentially depositing the electrically conducting metal on the selectively applied seed layer. For example, the seed layer can be selectively applied to a portion of the surface by employing photolithography, screen printing, inkjet printing, micro-contact stamping or dip-pen nanolithography or combinations of such techniques. In certain preferred embodiments, the seed layer can be selectively applied to a portion of the surface by first applying a mask layer on a substrate surface thereby exposing only a predetermined portion of the substrate surface for applying the seed layer. The step of preferentially depositing the electrically conducting metal can be enhanced by selecting a voltage at which electrically conduction material can be preferentially (or only) deposited on the selectively applied seed layer.
The present invention also encompasses methods of a chemically modifying the substrate with a linker material, such as a sulfur or halogen containing silane. In some embodiments, such chemical linkers can be applied to self-assemble into a monolayer of linker material. For example the linker material can be a sulfur-containing silane material such as (3-mercaptopropyl-trimethoxysilane) (3-Mercaptopropyl)methyldimethoxysilane, (3-Mercaptopropyl)triethoxysilane, 3-Mercaptopropyl-functionalized silica gel, (3-Chloropropyl)trimethoxysilane, (3-Bromopropyl)trimethoxysilane, or (3-Iodopropyl)trimethoxysilane. In one preferred embodiment, the sulfur-containing silane material includes (3-mercaptopropyl-trimethoxysilane) (MPS).
The methods of the present invention can be used to provide metallization with a wide variety of metals, including for example, one or more of the following metals: titanium, tantalum, tungsten, aluminum, chromium, nickel, cobalt, silver, gold, copper, and their alloys.
The following definitions provide additional context for the detailed descriptions that follow and are not intended to limit the scope of the detailed descriptions.
The term “substrate” as used herein is intended to encompass electronic materials, such as semiconductor and thermoelectric materials, as well as inert materials, such as glasses, ceramics and dielectrics.
The term “surface” as used herein is intended to encompass an entire surface of a substrate or a selected region of the substrate. For example, the seed layers described herein may be selectively deposited onto regions of the substrate to form discontinuous surfaces for selective metallization.
The term “metal” as used herein is intended to encompass elemental metals and metal alloys, as well as metallic compounds and metal precursors that can be used to form a conductive contacts and/or nanoparticles.
The term “self-assembling polymer” as used herein is intended to encompass any polymer that arranges in an ordered state as a solution of the polymer approaches equilibrium, thereby reducing its free energy. Examples include: 3-mercaptopropyl-trimethoxysilane (MPS), (3-Mercaptopropyl)methyldimethoxysilane, (3-Mercaptopropyl)triethoxysilane, 3-Mercaptopropyl-functionalized silica gel, (3-Chloropropyl)trimethoxysilane, (3-Bromopropyl)trimethoxysilane, (3-Iodopropyl)trimethoxysilane.
The term “grain homogeneity” as used herein is used to describe a measure of microstructural uniformity of regularity in grain boundary, grain size, or crystalline geometry
The term “linker material” as used herein is used to describe molecules, monomer, or functional groups on molecules or monomers that provide chemical bond or electrical affinity between neighboring molecules or monomers.
The term “bifunctional linker” as used herein is used to describe any molecule or monomer that has two functional groups, or binding sites, or has affinity for two groups of atoms or molecules.
The term “electrically conducting linker material” as used herein is used to describe a molecule or monomer that conducts electron into a reaction center thereby stabilizes an electron deficient molecule or monomer, for example, a cation.
The term “self-assembled monolayer” as used herein is used to describe an organized layer of amphiphilic molecules in which one end of the molecule, the “head group,” provides a special affinity for a substrate, and in which a second end of the molecule, the “tail group,” provides a functional group as a terminal end. The SAM is created by the chemisorption “head groups” onto a substrate from either the vapor or liquid phase followed by a substantially planar organization of “tail groups”.
In the fabrication of semiconductor and/or thermoelectric devices, conventional metallization techniques such as sputtering and electroplating are problematic in a number of aspects. In the case of sputtering, conventional methods require costly vacuum equipments and results in a low production rate. For example, the most widely used thermoelectric materials near room temperature, bismuth telluride and its alloys (Bi2SeyTe3y as the n-type, Bi2Sb2xTe3 as the p-type), form complex semiconductor-to-metal interfaces. These Bi2Te3-based alloys are small bandgap thermoelectric semiconductors with a low melting point (573 C), a low surface energy (hydrophobic), and a low resistivity (100-1000 μΩ-cm). In theory, the small bandgap property (0.11-0.16 eV) provides an ohmic contact with a low specific contact resistance (10 e-7 Ohm cm2), which are ideal properties for the fabrication of a semiconductor-to-metal contact. However, the hydrophobic property of the substrate surface requires an additional thin layer to improve adhesion. For example, chromium is typically applied by sputtered before a nickel contact is deposited onto Bi2Te3-based alloys. The surface of nanostructured Bi2Te3-based alloys exhibit several times more grain boundaries and a disordered orientation than bulk material, thereby presenting a broad and chaotic distribution of surface energy that is unfavorable to subsequent metallization.
As a result of the above problems with sputtering techniques, electrochemical deposition is widely use instead. However, all of commonly used electrochemical deposition techniques, electroplating techniques, and electroless plating techniques results in poor metallization on semiconductor substrates.
In the case of electroplating techniques, thermoelectric semiconductors, such as Bi2Te3-based alloys have a lower surface energy than metals leading to a poor wettability and a higher nucleation formation energy. The resulting scattered growth of nuclei on a small number of nucleation sites cause weak interface contact and poor adhesion. Nanostructured surfaces can have more nucleation sites for electroplating, however, the broad distribution of surface energy can cause electroplating nucleation to be more uneven.
In the case of electroless plating techniques, nickel is plated on Bi2Te3-based substrates by using an initial coating of palladium-tin catalyst. However, this method results in a relatively high contact resistivity because unwanted impurities (the palladium-tin used as a plating catalyst, the reducing agent, and the chelating agent) and structural imperfections accumulate at the interface. For Bi2Te3-based alloys, the acidic solution of the palladium-tin catalyst also oxidizes and corrodes the substrate surface according to the Pourbaix diagram. These nanostructured surfaces are particularly susceptible to damage at their weak points in the grain boundaries.
A third approach, direct electroplating, is a hybrid method that utilizes aspects of both electroplating and electroless plating techniques to deposit metal on a nonconductor or semiconductor. Direct electroplating starts by coating an activated palladium and further enhances the activated palladium colloid by dipping the colloid in a sulfide-containing solution. The presence of sulfide forms a link between the metal ions and the palladium, thereby allowing electrical current to pass during electroplating. Other compounds with the electron bridging property similar to sulfide can be used as such electroplating promotion agent. Unfortunately, the palladium-tin colloids used in these direct electroplating methods remain as sources of structural weakness, as discussed in the case of electroless plating.
Accordingly, better techniques for metallization are desired. In one aspect of the present invention, nanoparticles are used to provide a seed layer for metal deposition. As shown in
First, as shown in
Next, as shown in
Here, platinum nanoparticles can be used because platinum can be an inert metal and its suspension can be readily prepared without additional purification. Although platinum nanoparticles are used in the preferred embodiment, other nanoparticle materials can be used to provide a seed layer of nanoparticles.
The PVP-capped platinum nanoclusters can be synthesized by the following procedure: forming a PVP solution by dissolving 0.1 grams Poly-N-vinyl-2-pyrrolidone (PVP) (MW=8000) in 44 ml deionized water at room temperature in a beaker with stirring; adding a precursor of H2PtCl6 (0.2 grams) to the PVP solution, thereby obtaining a ratio of weight of polymer (PW) to a weight of noble metal (MW) of about 1.1; finally, adding a 5 ml reductant (0.5M NaBH4 solution) slowly to the solution. The solution quickly changes from yellowish to black, indicating the formation of Pt nanoclusters. The whole procedure can be performed at room temperature within 30 minutes.
Next, the deposition surface 101 and the seed layer 102 of nanoparticles thereon are annealed to sinter the seed layer of nanoparticles, thereby form a pretreated deposition surface.
According to a preferred embodiment, the pretreated deposition surface 101 can be annealed at 250° C. for 10 minutes at ambient conditions to sinter the platinum nanoparticles and to burn away the protective PVP-polymers.
Next, as shown in
A root-mean-square (RMS) thickness measurement can be made in each of the AFM images in
According to another aspect of the preferred embodiment, a metal can be selectively deposited on a predetermined region or regions of a substrate. The enabling electrochemical characteristics according to this aspect of the preferred embodiment is discussed below with respect to
As shown in
The seed layer of nanoparticles deposited on FTO serve as nucleation sites to raise the surface energy such that when the metal atoms are deposited onto the nanoparticles, the total surface energy can be reduced. Therefore, the seed layer of deposited nanoparticles cause the current-potential curve on a pretreated substrate to be less negative than an untreated substrate. This allows the metal atoms to more strongly adhere to the substrate rather than to each other.
As shown in
Accordingly, various electroplating voltage conditions are shown in
Therefore, a method of selective metal deposition is provided according to another aspect of a preferred embodiment. Specifically, if electroplating is performed within the voltage range of approximately −0.27V and −0.53V, only a selected portion, the circular region, of the glass substrate is metalized with tin.
As shown in
Next, as shown in
Next, the pretreated deposition surface 101 and the seed layer 102a and 102b of nanoparticles thereon are annealed to sinter the seed layer of nanoparticles. According to a preferred embodiment, the pretreated deposition surface 101 can be annealed at 250° C. for 10 minutes at ambient conditions to sinter the platinum nanoparticles and to burn away the protective PVP-polymers.
Next, as shown in
A similar trend can be found in electroplating nickel, copper, and gold, shown in
As discussed above, similar operational windows are provided for other electroplating metals. Accordingly,
Furthermore, as shown in
According to another aspect of preferred embodiment, optimum temporal parameters are provided for the electroplating process, and is discussed below with respect to
According to another aspect of the preferred embodiment, a wide range of optimum concentration and deposition time are provided for desirable metal deposition. As shown in
According to another aspect of the preferred embodiment, optimum temporal parameters are provided for the annealing step. As shown in
It is also observed that nanoparticles on FTO without annealing can be wiped off while no obvious nanoparticles being wiped off after annealing. Puff-off test also showed that insufficient annealing time would cause poor bonding between the nanoparticles and the substrate leading to coating came off.
Next, as shown in
Next, as shown in
Next, as shown in
Next, as shown in
Finally, as shown in
The results of the above deposition method can be verified through scanning electron microscope (SEM) images.
Furthermore, pull-off adhesion tests can be performed. For example, a pull-off adhesion tests for electroplated nickel on FTO glass with the nanoparticle bostontreatment showed that no deposited nickel can be stripped off by a 3M Flatback Masking Tape 250 (ASTM D3359). In contrast, without the nanoparticle treatment, almost all of the deposited nickel on the untreated FTO glass came off.
According to a third embodiment, as shown in
A substrate can be prepared by any number of conventional methods. For example, according to a preferred embodiment, bulk nanostructured Bi2Te3-based materials, p-type (alloyed with Sb as BixSb2-xTe3) and n-type (alloyed with Se as Bi2SeyTe3-y) disk samples of 25 mm in diameter and 2 mm in thickness are made by a ball milling and hot pressing method. After hot pressing, both sides of the disk sample are polished using sand paper. To achieve a wettable surface for subsequent metallization, a 1 minute immersion in a 0.5% bromine-ethanol solution at room temperature and a 5 minute immersion in a 5% WAKO CLEAN-100 at 45° C. with sonication are used for surface cleaning.
First, as shown in
The silanol groups react with the hydroxyl groups present on the substrate surface to form interfacial covalent bonds. Subsequent adsorptions result in the silanol groups condensing with each other to form a polysiloxane (Si—O—Si) network.
Next, as shown in
Here, the functional groups protruding from highly ordered and oriented SAMs produce a specific interaction function. Also, as it was discovered, a SAM is able to transport electrons by a hopping process. Therefore, according to the third embodiment, this hopping process can be combined with the nucleation function of the seed layer in the electroplating process by arranging a hydrolysable end-group and bridging functional group on SAMs.
As shown in
Next, as shown in
Next,
As shown in
Therefore, nickel atoms more strongly adhere to a nanostructured Bi2Te3 surface that is pretreated with a MPS monolayer. In contrast, the nickel atoms would more strongly adhere to each other than to an untreated nanostructured Bi2Te3-based alloy. The rather high excess energy of electroplating nucleation corresponds to an instantaneous nucleation model, where the growth of nuclei on a small number of active sites, such as crystal defects, atomic step or impurities, occurs in a very short time period. These nucleation sites grow into three-dimensional islands and then coalesce (Volmer-Weber growth). Island growth during electroplating nucleation is usually not desirable for technological applications due to its poor adhesion and non-uniform deposition.
Pull-off adhesion tests using 3M Flatback Masking Tape 250 (ASTM D3359) also showed that no coating was stripped off for a 1 μm layer of electroplated nickel on nanostructured Bi2Te3-based alloys with the MPS treatment, but almost all of the coating on the untreated nanostructured Bi2Te3-based alloy came off.
As shown in
Further as confirmation of the metal deposition method described above, shown in
As shown in
As shown in
Furthermore, according to a preferred embodiment, a method of fabricating stable and low-resistance ohmic contacts is provided. In order to form the desired contact, a low ohmic contact at each end of the Bi2Te3-based alloys requires a resistance of about 1×10-6 ohm-cm2, which represents approximately 1 percent of the total resistance. Under this condition, the impact of contact resistance can be safely neglected and the ratio of ZTeff to ZT equals to unity.
Table 1 (below) shows data of electrical contact resistance measured by a 4-wire AC method (Keithley 2300) for small cubes cut from a disk of n-type or p-type nanostructured Bi2Te3, both sides of which are treated by a MPS monolayer followed by electroplating a 1 μm layer of nickel and a 1 μm layer of gold. A small current (Joule heating can be neglected) with alternating polarity under a high frequency of 1000 kHz (the Peltier heat cancels due to periodic heating and cooling at the junction) from 0.03 mA to 0.1 mA was input into the sample from the top to the bottom. Total resistance can be obtained by the slope of the voltage drop and the current. The intrinsic resistance of nanostructured Bi2Te3 alloys can also be obtained by measuring the voltage drop across the sample body itself using a known distance. Therefore, the electrical contact resistance for both sides is the difference between total resistance and intrinsic resistance.
As shown in Table 1 below, the specific contact resistance of electroplated nickel/MPS/nanostructured Bi2Te3 alloys can be approximately 1×10-6 Ωcm2 and contributes around 1% of the total resistance. Thus, the contact resistance can be safely neglected and an ohmic contact is provided.
TABLE 1
Length
Width
Height
BiTe Resistivity
Total Rs
Specfic Contact Rs
Contact/Total
Type
No.
(mm)
(mm)
(mm)
(Ohm cm)
(Ohm)
(Ohm cm2)
(%)
N
1
1.07
1.06
1.54
1.29E−03
1.76E−02
8.79E−07
0.89
2
1.11
0.96
1.52
1.04E−03
1.48E−02
4.21E−07
0.54
3
1.21
1.21
1.48
1.08E−03
1.09E−02
2.92E−07
0.37
4
1.07
1.26
1.56
1.23E−03
1.44E−02
1.07E−06
1.11
P
1
0.89
1.01
1.48
1.17E−03
1.95E−02
1.02E−06
1.18
2
1.13
1.19
1.54
1.10E−03
1.27E−02
6.88E−07
0.81
3
1.20
1.20
1.69
1.00E−03
1.19E−02
9.90E−07
1.17
4
0.80
1.23
1.50
1.18E−03
1.82E−02
1.17E−06
1.32
Therefore, a method is provided for depositing an adhesive and uniform metallic layer onto a nanostructured Bi2Te3-based material. This method results in improved electrical and thermal conductivity at lower cost and higher throughput. Unlike sputtering, the deposition of MPS SAMs on a substrate can be achieved using a wet process, which can be significantly more cost effective. The thin MPS monolayer not only provides a good adhesive layer but also sufficient nucleation sites for electroplating, thereby improving adhesion and uniformity. Measurements of contact resistance and the device efficiency for a solar thermoelectric power generator are also confirmed to yield results of similar quality compared with those created conventional methods.
The new method has many distinct advantages over existing processes during the metallization step and would be applicable in the manufacturing of various substrates. One utility of this method can be the fabrication of metallic electrodes onto other thermoelectric materials, such as lead telluride, zinc telluride, and so on. Other examples include electroplating metals on conductive glass and other low-roughness ceramics for solar panels, light emitting diode (LED) wafers, and the solder bumping process. Additionally, some SAMs, such as octadecyl trichlorosilane (OTS), can be used for nanolithography by localized probe oxidation via AFM, STM or electrochemical methods. By integrating bridging-function SAMs and nanolithography SAMs, other potential applications include the creation of patterned electrically driven sensing surfaces, glass circuit boards for high density electronics packaging, microscale resistive heaters, transparent micro/nanoelectrodes, and surfaces where spatially patterned work functions could serve as templates for subsequent patterning.
Chen, Gang, Chen, Shuo, Ren, Zhifeng, Feng, Hsien-Ping, Bo, Yu, Poudel, Bed
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